This patch introduces new types for expressing CPU affinities. Instead
of dealing with physical CPU numbers, affinities are expressed as
rectangles in a grid of virtual CPU nodes. This clears the way to
conveniently assign sets of adjacent CPUs to subsystems, each of them
managing their respective viewport of the coordinate space.
By using 2D Cartesian coordinates, the locality of CPU nodes can be
modeled for different topologies such as SMP (simple Nx1 grid), grids of
NUMA nodes, or ring topologies.
r3 contains the recent Nova upstream kernel version plus the Genode specific
extensions and changes as known from r2.
Additionally, the r3 branch
* contains the assign_pci patch now directly,
* adds support for cross CPU IPC,
* fixes some issues with freeing up kernel memory part of r2 and
* update the documentation a bit.
Fixes#814
TFTP server requiring absolute directory names are supported (better) -
specify in RUN_OPT "--tftp-absolute" to create Pulsar config with absolute
path names for PXE boot.
Additional a symbolic link is created from the build directory to
"$PXE_TFTP_DIR_BASE$PXE_TFTP_DIR_OFFSET" automatically. This eases the use
together with autopilot for x86.
genode_until_run can be called now with a spawn id to able to reattach to a
spawned process (amt, serial output). Run scripts can now call genode_until_run
multiple times.
The new core-internal 'Address_space' interface enables cores RM service
to flush mappings of a PD in which a given 'Rm_client' thread resides.
Prior this patch, each platform invented their own way to flush mappings
in the respective 'rm_session_support.cc' implementation. However, those
implementations used to deal poorly with some corner cases. In
particular, if a PD session was destroyed prior a RM session, the RM
session would try to use no longer existing PD session. The new
'Address_space' uses the just added weak-pointer mechanism to deal with
this issue.
Furthermore, the generic 'Rm_session_component::detach' function has
been improved to avoid duplicated unmap operations for platforms that
implement the 'Address_space' interface. Therefore, it is related to
issue #595. Right now, this is OKL4 only, but other platforms will follow.
This enables us to use the run scripts applied to a native machine equipped
with Intel's AMT. If the environment variables are correctly set up, the remote
test machine is reseted via 'amttool', then via 'amtterm' the serial output
is collected and the normal run script matching pattern for success/failure of
the run script are applied.
'amttool' and 'amtterm' are part of the package called 'amtterm' shipped with
the Linux distributions like Ubuntu, Debian and lot more.
Following environment variables are required, to run the run scripts with a
native AMT test machine:
PXE_TFTP_DIR_BASE - absolute path of TFTP directory
PXE_TFTP_DIR_OFFSET - relative path to PXE_TFTP_DIR_BASE where the config file
will be generated - named 'config-00-00-00-00-00-00'
AMT_TEST_MACHINE_IP - TCP/IP address of target AMT test machine
AMT_TEST_MACHINE_PWD - password of target AMT test machine
Issue #679
Bender fixes the serial output on modern PC hardware. Prior this patch,
it was used only when combined with pulsar. Now, we also use it when
booting via GRUB.
Allocate ever an extra page behind the commandline pointer. If it turns out
that this page is unused, because commandline was short enough, unmap the
memory and put the virtual and physical regions back to the allocator.
Fix#664
With this patch, the 'futex' syscall gets used for blocking and unblocking
of threads in the Linux-specific lock implementation.
The 'Native_thread_id' type, which was previously used in the
lock-internal 'Applicant' class to identify a thread to be woken up,
was not suitable anymore for implementing this change. With this patch,
the 'Thread_base*' type gets used instead, which also has the positive
effect of making the public 'cancelable_lock.h' header file
platform-independent.
Fixes#646.
Revoke the right to set the portal id (aka label) when it is not needed
anymore. Otherwise everybody in the system having a mapping of the portal can
reset the label to something we don't expect.
Issue #667
This patch simplifies the way of how Genode's base libraries are
organized. Originally, the base API was implemented in the form of many
small libraries such as 'thread', 'env', 'server', etc. Most of them
used to consist of only a small number of files. Because those libraries
are incorporated in any build, the checking of their inter-dependencies
made the build process more verbose than desired. Also, the number of
libraries and their roles (core only, non-core only, shared by both core
and non-core) were not easy to capture.
Hereby, the base libraries have been reduced to the following few
libraries:
- startup.mk contains the startup code for normal Genode processes.
On some platform, core is able to use the library as well.
- base-common.mk contains the parts of the base library that are
identical by core and non-core processes.
- base.mk contains the complete base API implementation for non-core
processes
Consequently, the 'LIBS' declaration in 'target.mk' files becomes
simpler as well. In the most simple case, only the 'base' library must
be mentioned.
Fixes#18